Papal jurisprudence, 385-1234 : social origins and Medieval reception of Canon Law /
D'Avray, David L., 1952-
Papal jurisprudence, 385-1234 : social origins and Medieval reception of Canon Law / D. L. d'Avray, University College London. - xi, 320 pagine ; 23 cm.
Include bibliografia e indice.
Introduction -- Transformations and long-term explanations -- The Christian Roman empire, c. 400 -- Circa 400 : practical complexities and uncertainties -- Circa 400 : uncertainty about grace -- Papal rulings and ritual -- Hierarchies -- Clerical status and monks -- Returning heretics -- Pelagianism and the papacy -- Leo I -- Post-imperial syntheses -- Early papal laws in the barbarian west -- Carolingian culture and its legacy -- 1050-1150 -- Theology and law -- C. 400 and c. 1200 : complexity, conversion and bigamia -- Clerics in minor orders -- Choosing bishops -- Overall conclusions.
"The aim of this book is to link up the two ages of papal decretals, c. 400 and c. 1200, by looking at the causes and effects of the documents edited and translated [in] "Papal Jurisdiction c. 400: Sources of the Canon Law Tradition". First the causes: in late Antiquity, why were papal rulings requested in the first place? Then the effects: the continuation by later bishops of Rome, above all Leo I and Gelasius I, of the pattern set in the first fifty years of papal jurisprudence; the incorporation in canon law collections of those early rulings; and their subsequent reception up to the mid-thirteenth century".
9781108473002
Diritto canonico--Medioevo
KBR190.D38 / A373 2021
262.9/2
Papal jurisprudence, 385-1234 : social origins and Medieval reception of Canon Law / D. L. d'Avray, University College London. - xi, 320 pagine ; 23 cm.
Include bibliografia e indice.
Introduction -- Transformations and long-term explanations -- The Christian Roman empire, c. 400 -- Circa 400 : practical complexities and uncertainties -- Circa 400 : uncertainty about grace -- Papal rulings and ritual -- Hierarchies -- Clerical status and monks -- Returning heretics -- Pelagianism and the papacy -- Leo I -- Post-imperial syntheses -- Early papal laws in the barbarian west -- Carolingian culture and its legacy -- 1050-1150 -- Theology and law -- C. 400 and c. 1200 : complexity, conversion and bigamia -- Clerics in minor orders -- Choosing bishops -- Overall conclusions.
"The aim of this book is to link up the two ages of papal decretals, c. 400 and c. 1200, by looking at the causes and effects of the documents edited and translated [in] "Papal Jurisdiction c. 400: Sources of the Canon Law Tradition". First the causes: in late Antiquity, why were papal rulings requested in the first place? Then the effects: the continuation by later bishops of Rome, above all Leo I and Gelasius I, of the pattern set in the first fifty years of papal jurisprudence; the incorporation in canon law collections of those early rulings; and their subsequent reception up to the mid-thirteenth century".
9781108473002
Diritto canonico--Medioevo
KBR190.D38 / A373 2021
262.9/2

